Monday, December 9, 2013

The boxer: Nelson Mandela (1918-2013)

OF ALL THE THINGS we knew him to be in the world he transformed — a freedom fighter, a statesman, an avatar for justice and tolerance, a prisoner and a president — we sometimes forget that, at more than one point and in more than one way during his 95 years on the planet, Nelson Mandela was a boxer.

Given everything thrown at him for decades, we might have expected Mandela to be a student of the sweet science. So much of his life reflected the pugilist’s balance of stealth and strength, pointed to an existential equipoise practiced in one of the world’s most dangerous places for a man of his history and race.

When he passed from our world to the next on Thursday night at his home in Houghton, Johannesburg, at the age of 95, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela had, to borrow an overworked phrase, “fought the good fight” — against the injustice of the apartheid regime, against his detractors and enemies, against monumental odds.

Ironically, at the end of a long and storied life, the man who fought briefly as a heavyweight fighter at Fort Hare University had achieved in his lifetime a triumph more than two thousand years old. In the world that was his boxing ring, he’d successfully applied Sun Tze’s philosophy: “To win without fighting is best.”

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Mandela achieved his deepest victories not with the violence of boxing, nor the wildcat infrastructure sabotage of the MK group he founded, nor the confrontational strategies of boycotts, strikes and civil disobedience practiced by the African National Congress. Mandela prevailed through the power of moral suasion, personal example and an unshakeable core conviction of who he was and what was right.

That self-awareness remained intact after 27 years of imprisonment; that self-possession, a sang-froid borne of an indelible moral center, would form his emotional core on his journey from his prison on Robben Island to the presidency of South Africa.

But Mandela understood there’s more than one way to fight. His call for a fully democratized South Africa respectful of all its citizens had parallels half a world away. It’s impossible to take note of Mandela’s role in the emancipation of his country from its brutal history without seeing how that struggle dovetailed — almost synonymously — with the civil rights movement in the United States.

John Lewis, the Georgia congressman and an icon of that movement, told MSNBC on Thursday: “The leadership, the vision, the commitment, the dedication, the inspiration of this one man meant everything to the American civil rights movement. There was this unbelievable relationship between what was happening in America and what had happened in South Africa. We would say from time to time that the struggle in Birmingham and the struggle in Selma are inseparable from the struggle in Sharpeville.”

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IN SOME WAYS, in some corners, he was an accidental inspiration. “A great light has gone out in the world,” British Prime Minister David Cameron tweeted of Mandela on a Twitter page on Thursday, only to be met with reactions of rage and hate, people calling him everything but a child of God — not Mandela, but Cameron himself.

“The mistakes my party made in the past with respect to relations with the ANC and sanctions on South Africa make it all the more important to listen now,” he said. “The fact that there is so much to celebrate in the new South Africa is not in spite of Mandela and the ANC, it is because of them — and we Conservatives should say so clearly today.”

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Cameron was not alone in his corrected understanding of Mandela, his role and impact on our time. Since Thursday, others have summoned their own admissions of wrong judgment; others said how wrong they are.

Pik Botha, the former South African ambassador and for years the prime enforcer of the apartheid regime, has come around. “The day he was released, he displayed the acumen and attitude of a person who has been a president before,” Botha told Al Jazeera over the weekend. “Amazing, amazing what insight he had into the minds of people.”

Even Mandela’s jailer saw the error of his ways last week. “When I got the message when he passed away, it was very sad for me,” Christo Brand told The Associated Press on Saturday. “But I think he was successful and he did what he wanted to do. I wanted him to go in peace and I am thinking of the family today, what they go through.”

Brand said the two men had “nice chats about the past, about his family. He wanted to pick up my grandchild, to hold him ... he was a little bit shy to go to him.”

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IT’S THIS reconciliation of the seemingly irreconcilable — the black political prisoner and the white Afrikaans civil servant responsible for keeping him a prisoner — that distills Mandela’s legacy as a unifier. As president, he brought black and white South Africans together in the same spirit of nationalism that had previously divided them. And it was his big spirit — irrepressible, effervescent, impatient and accessible — that mark his legacy as a human being. One of us.

Jacob Zuma said it best on Thursday: “What made Nelson Mandela great was precisely what made him human: We saw in him what we seek in ourselves.”

When the world pays its respects next week, at Madiba’s state funeral on Dec. 15th — an event expected to be one of the largest state funerals in history — world leaders will be in a South Africa just months from celebrating its 20th anniversary as a fully-participatory democracy, led by Zuma, the latest of the four black South African presidents elected within that 20 years.

Shameless Self-Promotion II

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shameless self-promotion

One nation subject to change: A collection of topical essays exploring television, hip-hop, patriotism, the use of language under Bush II, and the author's own reckoning with mortality. | Available at Authorhouse

A veteran journalist, producer and blogger, Michael Eric Ross is a frequent contributor to the content channels of Jerrick Media, and a periodic contributor to TheWrap, a major online source of entertainment news and analysis. He writes from Los Angeles on the arts, politics, race and ethnicity, and pop culture. A graduate of the University of Colorado, he's worked as a reporter, editor and critic at several newspapers and websites, including The New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News, MSN, Current and NBCNews.com. He was formerly an adjunct professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. His writing has appeared in The New York Times Book Review, Wired, Entertainment Weekly, PopMatters, Salon, The Root, seattlepi.com, NPR.com, theGrio, BuzzFeed, Medium and other publications. Author of the novel Flagpole Days (2003); and essay collections Interesting Times (2004) and American Bandwidth (2009), he contributed to the anthologies MultiAmerica (edited by Ishmael Reed, 1997) and Soul Food (2000).